Nearly 60,000 people are diagnosed with oral cancer in the U.S. every year, according to the American Cancer Society, and the rate of new cases continues to rise.
KAIST researchers have discovered a molecular switch that can revert cancer cells back to normal by capturing the critical ...
The cancer takes root in epithelial cells, the top layer of cells lining these cavities. Around 30% of oral cancer cases are caused by human papillomavirus ... normal stem cells into cancer ...
A team of researchers in the United States has developed a groundbreaking cancer treatment that starves tumors by leveraging ...
In an astounding breakthrough, scientists have discovered a molecular 'switch' that can revert cancer cells back into healthy ...
Nearly 60,000 people are diagnosed with oral cancer ... normal suppression of tumor growth), the researchers triggered a cascade of cellular and molecular changes that reprogrammed normal stem ...
Oral cancer — also known as head and neck squamous cell carcinoma — affects the mouth, throat, nose, sinuses and voice box. The cancer takes root in epithelial cells, the top layer of cells lining ...
In most human ... normal and malignant cells, we created a catalytically inactive, dominant negative form of hTERT. We expressed this mutant (DN-hTERT) ectopically in human immortalized cells and ...
A domestic research team has discovered a method for restoring cancer cells back to normal ... a phenomenon in which normal cells turn cancerous, to reverse this transformation. Critical transition ...
This work indicates that introduction of telomerase into normal human somatic cells does not lead to growth transformation, does not bypass cell–cycle induced checkpoint controls and does not ...
Oral cancer — also known as head and neck squamous cell carcinoma — affects the mouth, throat, nose, sinuses and voice box. The cancer takes root in epithelial cells, the top layer of cells lining ...